Online: | |
Visits: | |
Stories: |
Story Views | |
Now: | |
Last Hour: | |
Last 24 Hours: | |
Total: |
This ancient form of divination seeks clues to the future by using metal vessels. Brass is especially prized, as some believe it can repel evil spirits and demons. Liquid is poured into the vessel. This is usually oil, ink, perfumed water, or something similar. The diviner recites prayers and incantations in preparation for the divination. He or she will gaze into the liquid without blinking. Using this method, the diviner enters a trance and may experience visions of prophecy. In a related method, the diviner places a simple brass plate upon a consecrated altar at midnight. As the plate is placed upon the altar, the diviner asks his question. From there, he has only to wait until dawn. The answers will be written upon the brass plate in dew, although the language or symbols used is often understood only by the diviner.
The post Cattabomancy appeared first on Richard Cassaro.
Richard Cassaro is a journalist, speaker and author of “Written In Stone: Decoding The Secret Masonic Religion Hidden In Gothic Cathedrals And World Architecture.” The book uncovers a lost Wisdom Tradition that was practiced globally in antiquity, found memorialized in pyramids, Triptychs, and identical images worldwide. The central tenets of this tradition have been perpetuated in Western Secret Societies. The most visible of these is the so-called “Masonic Fraternity,” an age-old chivalric Order whose ranks have included Europe’s Gothic cathedral builders and America’s Founding Fathers. Richard has two websites: www.DeeperTruth.com and www.RichardCassaro.com